4,120 research outputs found

    A Course on Economic Justice: The intersection of philosophy and economics

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    The process of teaching a topic that inhabits the upper reaches of both philosophy and economic theory, while swooping as near the earth as political policy, is both exhilarating and terrifying. To do it well is indeed rare. We present our approach, some of the characteristics and thoughts from our students, and some of the insights that we developed along the way.economics and philosophy; economic justice; interdisciplinary teaching

    Two-dimensional polymer networks at a mixed boundary: Surface and wedge exponents

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    We provide general formulae for the configurational exponents of an arbitrary polymer network connected to the surface of an arbitrary wedge of the two-dimensional plane, where the surface is allowed to assume a general mixture of boundary conditions on either side of the wedge. We report on a comprehensive study of a linear chain by exact enumeration, with various attachments of the walk's ends to the surface, in wedges of angles π/2\pi/2 and π\pi, with general mixed boundary conditions.Comment: 4 pages, Latex2e, 3 figures, Eur. Phys. J. B macro

    THE LIVED EXPERIENCES OF PARENTS WITH CHRONIC SORROW WHO ARE CARING FOR CHILDREN WITH A CHRONIC MEDICAL CONDITION

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    Caring for the millions of children living with a chronic medical condition creates multiple parental burdens. Parents whose children have a diagnosis of a chronic medical condition may experience an ongoing, unresolved grief or sadness phenomenon known as chronic sorrow. This may impact parental ability to manage their child’s health care needs and may lead to negative health outcomes for the parent caregiver, affected child, and the family. The aim of this interpretive phenomenological study was to understand the nature and meaning of the lived experiences of parents with chronic sorrow who are caring for a child with a chronic medical condition. A cohort of parent participants whose children have various chronic medical diagnoses was included to determine similarities as well as unique and diverse experiences of chronic sorrow. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews and analyzed for common themes. Demographic data, field notes and a reflexivity journal were important components of data analysis. Demographic data was analyzed using SPSS version 19 software. Six themes captured the nature and meaning of chronic sorrow for twelve participants and overarching truth of life goes on represented the six themes. Implications included early recognition of persons at risk and those who have chronic sorrow, development and testing of assessment tools, inclusion of fathers and children in future research, and inclusion of chronic sorrow content in curricula across the disciplines of healthcare

    Evolving turbulence and magnetic fields in galaxy clusters

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    We discuss, using simple analytical models and MHD simulations, the origin and parameters of turbulence and magnetic fields in galaxy clusters. Three physically distinct regimes can be identified in the evolution of cluster turbulence and magnetic fields. Firstly, the fluctuation dynamo will produce microgauss-strong, random magnetic fields during cluster formation and major mergers. Turbulent velocity of about 300 km/s can be maintained at scales 100-200 kpc. The magnetic field is intermittent, has a smaller scale of 20-30 kpc and average strength of 2 microgauss. Secondly, when major mergers end, turbulent speed and magnetic field undergo a power-law decay, decreasing in strength but increasing in scale by a factor of about two. Thirdly, smaller-mass subclusters and cluster galaxies produce turbulent wakes, with turbulent speeds and magnetic field strengths similar to those quoted above. The velocity scales are about 200 kpc and 10 kpc respectively, and the magnetic field scale is about 6 times smaller. Although these wakes may fill only a small fraction of the cluster volume, their area covering factor can be close to unity. So one can potentially reconcile observations that indicate the coexistence of turbulence with ordered filamentary gas structures, as in the Perseus cluster. Random Faraday rotation measure is estimated to be typically 100-200 rad/m^2, in agreement with observations. We predict detectable synchrotron polarization from cluster radio halos at wavelengths 3-6 cm, if observed at sufficiently high resolution (abridged).Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, Replaced to match version accepted by MNRA

    A Simplest Swimmer at Low Reynolds Number: Three Linked Spheres

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    We propose a very simple one-dimensional swimmer consisting of three spheres that are linked by rigid rods whose lengths can change between two values. With a periodic motion in a non-reciprocal fashion, which breaks the time-reversal symmetry as well as the translational symmetry, we show that the model device can swim at low Reynolds number. This model system could be used in constructing molecular-size machines

    Conformal Field Theory as Microscopic Dynamics of Incompressible Euler and Navier-Stokes Equations

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    We consider the hydrodynamics of relativistic conformal field theories at finite temperature. We show that the limit of slow motions of the ideal hydrodynamics leads to the non-relativistic incompressible Euler equation. For viscous hydrodynamics we show that the limit of slow motions leads to the non-relativistic incompressible Navier-Stokes equation. We explain the physical reasons for the reduction and discuss the implications. We propose that conformal field theories provide a fundamental microscopic viewpoint of the equations and the dynamics governed by them.Comment: 4 page

    Magnetic Susceptibility of an integrable anisotropic spin ladder system

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    We investigate the thermodynamics of a spin ladder model which possesses a free parameter besides the rung and leg couplings. The model is exactly solved by the Bethe Ansatz and exhibits a phase transition between a gapped and a gapless spin excitation spectrum. The magnetic susceptibility is obtained numerically and its dependence on the anisotropy parameter is determined. A connection with the compounds KCuCl3, Cu2(C5H12N2)2Cl4 and (C5H12N)2CuBr4 in the strong coupling regime is made and our results for the magnetic susceptibility fit the experimental data remarkably well.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures included, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Bulletin No. 141 - Variation in Minimum Temperatures Due to the Topography of a Mountain Valley in its Relation to Fruit Growing

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    The most destructive weather enemy in all fruit growing sections is the late spring frost which frequently occurs after warm weather has caused the fruit blossoms to become fully developed. The variation in severity of such frosts in mountain valleys is a phenomenon well known to the practical orchardist. The actual extent of this variation and the contributing causes have claimed only a very little attention from scientific workers in the mountainous regions. The present publcation is a preliminary report of investigations which were planned to measure the extent of such temperature variations, and acertain if possible some of the causes which bring about their occurrence

    Motion and homogenization of vortices in anisotropic Type II superconductors

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    The motion of vortices in an anisotropic superconductor is considered. For a system of well-separated vortices, each vortex is found to obey a law of motion analogous to the local induction approximation, in which velocity of the vortex depends upon the local curvature and orientation. A system of closely packed vortices is then considered, and a mean field model is formulated in which the individual vortex lines are replaced by a vortex density
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